Nikon D7000 First Look

After a full day and one brief morning shooting, a few things are emerging with this camera. The first is that the 4GB SD cards that held all the shots I could ever want when doing compact digital reviews get filled up pretty quickly shooting a RAW/JPEG fine combo at 6 fps with a 16 megapixel sensor. I mentioned at the top of this review that the resolution increase was not the most significant feature of the D7000, but what it does do is give you the ability to make larger prints than lower resolution cameras, or crop more aggressively while still retaining enough pixel density to still produce good quality prints. Here’s an original shot and two crops to 8 x 12 inches, one at 301 DPI (optimal print quality) and the other at 220 DPI which will still produce a good quality print.

Original

301 DPI Crop

220 DPI Crop

Image quality and color is excellent at default values, but I did increase sharpening a bit via internal menu.

Despite my brief time with the camera, the new AF system has gotten a fairly comprehensive workout and passed with flying colors so far. It has proven to be adept at picking up a solitary gull in open sky and holding AF while tracking others across really busy backgrounds, and it tracks surfers on a wave effortlessly.

It has also performed well acquiring and holding focus shooting a komodo dragon through glass and plants; a Johnson’s crocodile through glass in dim light at 3200 ISO and through glass at a constantly moving tiger.

A quick look at high ISO performance indicates the D7000 is the best cropped-sensor Nikon ever, despite packing 16.2 megapixels on a sensor size that formerly had to deal with “only” 12.3 million. Here are 6400 ISO shots from my D300 and the D7000, both using the kit 18-105mm lens at f/11 and with no high ISO or long-exposure noise reduction selected in-camera.

D300 ISO 6400

D7000 ISO 6400

And here is each shot after being washed with Nik software’s Dfine 2 noise reduction program.

D300 ISO 6400 post-processed

D7000 ISO 6400 post-processed

Finally, D7000 shots at 6400 ISO with normal and high strength high ISO noise reduction enabled in camera.

ISO 6400, Normal noise reduction

ISO 6400, High noise reduction

As day two draws to a close, the D7000 has proven to be a very capable DSLR. It starts and shoots quickly, acquires and maintains AF well with the new system, and produces the quality images one expects from a DSLR. Two days do not a full review make, but right now my only gripe with the D7000 is the somewhat awkward location of the release mode dial beneath the mode dial: it can cause you to bump the camera out of your chosen shooting mode when switching from continuous to single shooting rates or accessing the self-timer. But if that’s the worst we experience from the D7000, I’m betting Nikon sells a bunch of these things. Our full review of the D7000 will follow in the not too distant future.